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Jeanice Lee

Featured in: Favicon air1.com

Articles

  • 4 weeks ago | air1.com | Tala Shatara |Marya Morgan |Monika Kelly |Jeanice Lee

    (Air1 Closer Look) – Dogs trained to sniff out electronics are partnering with local police. Canines go to suspected sites of child abuse and trafficking and join the search for evidence. Common digital storage devices such as SDcards or thumb drives contain a miniscule amount of a essential chemicals which they can easily smell. Defenders for Children, a non-profit organization based in Greenville, South Carolina gifts the special K9s to law enforcement.

  • 1 month ago | klove.com | Jeanice Lee |Felipe Aguilar |Jim Davis

    Posted on Sunday, March 9, 2025 by Jim DavisJim Davis talks with Kenny Alonzo, Executive Director at Rocketown in Nashville. The organization serves Nashville area teens by providing a safe environment where they can come after school and participate in various activities. Alonzo says the organization was founded by Christian musician Michael W. Smith as a place for teens to gather and connect instead of roaming the streets. Activities include a skate park, a recording studio, and an E Sports room.

  • 2 months ago | air1.com | Monika Kelly |Marya Morgan |Jeanice Lee |Rafael Sierra

    (Air1 Closer Look) –When we think of people who fall into homelessness, certain disparities come to mind, including mental illness, addiction, troubled veterans, people with disabilities and more; but statistics show that homelessness can happen to anyone. One Appalachian family knows this all too well. On Sept 27th, 2024, the catastrophic Hurricane Helene ripped through Western North Carolina.

  • Jan 10, 2025 | air1.com | Jeanice Lee |Marya Morgan |Rafael Sierra |Lexy Smith

    (Air1 Closer Look) – Overdose deaths by fentanyl are down for the first time in the U.S. since the COVID-19 pandemic, but the potentially lethal anesthetic still threatens unsuspecting online buyers. In 2024, the U.S. DEA seized more than 367 million deadly doses of cheap and easy counterfeit medicine, after nabbing 390 million deadly doses the previous year.

  • Jan 10, 2025 | klove.com | Jeanice Lee |Marya Morgan |Rafael Sierra |Lexy Smith

    (K-LOVE Closer Look) – Overdose deaths by fentanyl are down for the first time in the U.S. since the COVID-19 pandemic, but the potentially lethal anesthetic still threatens unsuspecting online buyers. In 2024, the U.S. DEA seized more than 367 million deadly doses of cheap and easy counterfeit medicine, after nabbing 390 million deadly doses the previous year.

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